Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Shortfalls On Track To Be $10.8 Billion Bigger Than Forecasts: Watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2015 11:34 AM
    OTTAWA — Canada's budget watchdog says the federal government's medium-term deficits will likely be billions of dollars higher than what was predicted in "optimistic" Liberal forecasts.
     
    The government is on track to deliver annual shortfalls that will be as much as $10.8 billion higher than expected, the parliamentary budget office said Tuesday.
     
    In the near term, however, the budget office predicted the government to perform better than the projections in Finance Minister Bill Morneau's recent fiscal update.
     
    In fact, the budget office says Ottawa is currently headed for a $1.2-billion surplus this fiscal year — a $4.2-billion swing from the Liberals' $3-billion shortfall projection for 2015-16.
     
    The report underlined the biggest reasons for the contrasts between the two 2015-16 calculations as "other revenues" and "direct program expenses," which, combined, accounted for $3.9 billion of the difference. It noted the government had yet to release the detailed data for those categories.
     
    "For this reason, PBO cannot assess whether the government's outlook for the 2015-16 budgetary balance is pessimistic," said the report by parliamentary budget officer Jean-Denis Frechette.
     
    In April, the previous Conservative government projected a $2.4-billion surplus for 2015-16 — including the $1 billion set aside for contingencies.
     
    Some observers have said it could be in the Liberal government's interest to lower expectations and blame their Tory predecessors as a way to deflect future fiscal criticism.
     
    Frechette's report also included a 2016-17 deficit estimate that's $900 million smaller than Ottawa's forecast. 
     
    But for the fiscal years between 2017-18 and 2020-21, the budget office warned the federal books are on a trajectory to produce annual shortfalls of $2.3 billion, $3.6 billion, $6.3 billion and $10.8 billion higher than the Liberals' predictions.
     
    Frechette pointed to Ottawa's "more optimistic outlook" for revenues it expects to rake in from personal and corporate income taxes as well as the GST.
     
    "The government's status-quo outlook for the economy and federal budget over the medium term is optimistic," the report said. 
     
    "Based on forecast comparisons and forecast revisions, PBO believes that there is downside risk to the government's medium-term outlook."
     
    The fresh projections mean additional pressure on the Liberals to live up to their election vows to keep their expected annual deficits from climbing and to balance the books in four years. The Liberals pledged to boost federal infrastructure spending by billions of dollars as a way to fire up the economy and create jobs.
     
    Both the budget office and government numbers were crunched before factoring in the billions of dollars in election-campaign spending commitments by the Liberals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Dozen U.S. States Want Door Slammed On Refugees, As Political Rift Deepens

    The Paris attacks have exposed an ideological cleavage in western countries over the handling of the Syrian refugee crisis, with the political left and right at odds over welcoming migrants.

    A Dozen U.S. States Want Door Slammed On Refugees, As Political Rift Deepens

    Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec

    Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Closing arguments are set to begin today at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial.

    Final Arguments Set To Begin At Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec

    Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff

    Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff
    Manitoba Opposition Leader Brian Pallister is accusing the NDP government of going on a hiring spree over the past year, but the government says Pallister's math is wrong.

    Manitoba Tories Accuse NDP Government Of Padding Its Political Staff

    Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne

    Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says the 10,000 Syrian refugees the province has committed to taking in is "a big number," but there are millions of people in need.

    Ontario's Pledge To Settle 10,000 Refugees Is Large, But Doable: Kathleen Wynne

    Sen. Mike Duffy To Star In The Last Chapter Of His Long Trial

    Sen. Mike Duffy To Star In The Last Chapter Of His Long Trial
    OTTAWA — The last chapter of the long trial of Sen. Mike Duffy will be headlined by a much anticipated appearance by the main character himself.

    Sen. Mike Duffy To Star In The Last Chapter Of His Long Trial

    Woman Tells Conference In Winnipeg About Being Sexually Abused By Adopted Family

    Woman Tells Conference In Winnipeg About Being Sexually Abused By Adopted Family
    One of the keynote speakers is a First Nations woman who goes by the name “Great White Owl Woman.”

    Woman Tells Conference In Winnipeg About Being Sexually Abused By Adopted Family